Tools of Jihad, part 4

Paul Danahar is the BBC Middle East editor and the subject of part 3 of this series, which I will wind up tomorrow. When the son of Danahar’s BBC Gaza colleague Jihad Masharawi was killed at the outset of Israel’s Operation Pillar of Defense this past November, Danahar all but accused Israel of murder. Via his Twitter account [email protected], Danahar tweeted his reaction to young Masharawi’s death: “Questioned [sic] asked here is: if Israel can kill a man riding on a moving motorbike (as they did last month) how did Jihad’s son get killed?”

Yet Danahar’s own photo of Masharawi’s house after it was hit by the munition that killed Masharawi’s son (above) strongly suggests that no Israeli munition did the damage. On the contrary, it suggests that an errant Hamas rocket killed Masharawi’s son. I asked Danahar via Twitter at the time on what basis he identified the munition as Israeli. He never responded.

Now that the advance version of a UN report has suggested that a Hamas rocket killed Masharawi’s son, Danahar seems to have lost interest in determining how Jihad’s son got killed. Danahar has confined himself to this disingenuous tweet:

UN disputes details of strike on colleagues house in Gaza. IDF briefed at time it was them & were targeting militant http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21749527 …
Reply to @pdanahar

The point here — and I do have a point — is that Danahar, the BBC, and other mainstream media outlets including the Washington Post made themselves supporting players in a monumental example of Terrorist Theater. They turned the death of young Masharawi and Israel’s alleged culpability into an international sensation. If only these media giants had the least interest in understanding the use to which they have been put or keeping it from happening again.